Can HP and Dell Duplicate IBM's Success?

Both companies are now at a crossroads, trying to decide whether they can still be relevant.

NEW YORK ( TheStreet) -- With computer giants Hewlett-Packard ( HPQ) and Dell ( DELL) marred in a neck-and-neck race to see which one can spiral more quickly into irrelevance, I'm starting to wonder what metric will be the first to reach to zero, market share or market cap?

As harsh as that may sound, both companies have taken different paths towards futility while yielding broadly the same results. However, none of their attempts to avert death to this point have worked.

Worse, it seems the biggest mistake both companies have made was thinking they can compete in mobile instead of maintaining their focus of turning into the mold of IBM ( IBM). It's hard to imagine if another company deserves more credit for having anticipated correctly the demise of the PC industry. IBM was smarter than many critics care to admit.

However, for HP and Dell, it's not too late to shed the woeful hardware business and transform themselves into a complete enterprise services company. After all, IBM proved that it can be done. The company's most recent earnings report prove what is possible when great vision and sound execution comes together.

Strength In Numbers

Though IBM saw revenue declined by 3% and missing analysts' estimates, on a constant currency basis, revenue actually rose by 1% year-over-year and 5% sequentially. Both HP and Dell could appreciate that IBM's hardware revenue fell by 7%. This is an area in which both have shown considerable signs of struggle.

However, IBM was able to offset this weakness with strength in other areas of its business. For instance, both its service and software segments grew by 1% and 4%, respectively. Even more remarkable was that IBM was able to post better than one point in gross margin improvement while growing its operating income by almost 1%.